Forums / Discussion / Serious Debate

14,077 total conversations in 681 threads

+ New Thread


The definition of "language" is subjective.

Last posted Jul 16, 2018 at 03:26AM EDT. Added Jul 15, 2018 at 07:43PM EDT
2 posts from 2 users

The nordic languages are categorized as germanic, not to be confused with the dialects of the many germanic states.

The French, Spanish, Portugese, and Italian languages are called Romantic, they were derived from Latin, the official language of the now-defunct Roman Empire.

English and Frisian, the latter of which is a language family existing within the coast within the Netherlands, the former of which is spoken by roughly half of the internet, are strange german-romance hybrids.

Does anyone know the exact definition of a "language"?

Last edited Jul 15, 2018 at 07:44PM EDT

Do you want the clinical definition or a definition agreed upon by a group of people or just some random dude's opinion on what language is?

Cause it'll boil down to roughly the same thing; a common tongue held by a group of people(s) that overlaps with the culture of a given place.

Skeletor-sm

This thread is closed to new posts.

Old threads normally auto-close after 30 days of inactivity.

Why don't you start a new thread instead?

Sup! You must login or signup first!